96 Superglo solid powder containing Lumium '" "," ) I ""* .$ j -$1>-' ....' þw- ."",} "-. \. ) (j 'fI1'i' .\.o, . \ -'\ .:. i," . , ;:' " ,< :,,_ J' ifr A, I{ , r :i-ii :.. "Y'. )'f I ..- ).- ò .. ', \, : ;/ ; -V Finely compressed handsomely cased, and portable This is the same Superglow Face Powder with Lumium that has made cosmetic history- Lumium being the light-reflecting agent which gives a more intense glow designed to make you look younger and more beautiful. In a fluted golden case 5.00 In ivory-and-gold compact 2.50 plus tax 4 e\mA4;" em 663 FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK 22 THE DECISION OF INSTINCT ii i --- 1- -- - -- -- . S EVEN years ago, when my hus- band and I were living in Mazat- lán on the west coast of Mexico, my first son, Rafael, was delivered, prematurely, in a small local sanato- rium, instead of in a Los Angeles hospital, as I had planned. I was alone at the time; my husband was away on busIness. Rafael was the first fo;eign child to be born in Mazatlan for over twelve years, and the event became, in time, something to marvel at among members of the foreign colony. The American vice-consul, particularly, used to hold me up as a kind of heroIC' exam- ple. I never felt that I merited all this praise. Though the sanatoFium was primitive and the nuns were unschooled in obstetrical medicine and I could speak only a few phrases of SpanIsh, my con- finement-after the first fright and doubt were over-came off so well that I cherished the experience. After I brought the haby home from the sancl- torium, I followed the advice of a De- partment of Labor booklet on infant care. It, too, worked beautifully. When I found that I was going to have a sec- ond child, I decided to have it in the same local sanatorium. Alex was born a year and a half after Rclfael. Unlike his older brother, who was a model of patience, Alex kept the sanatorium in an uproar from the mo- ment of his birth He refused to eat at the proper times. He slept all day and howled all night. Sister Celestina, the most faith- ful of the nuns, stood leaning over his cradle making funny faces until she was haggard. I thought at first thdt the nuns had spoiled him.. they didn't believe in let- ting a baby cry it out. As soon as I got Alex home, I told my hus- band and the maid to ignore his crying. Evening after evening, my husband and I would sit In the living room of our apartment pretending to read or talk From the children's bedroo111 would come heart-rending walls. At last, my husband would say, "Maybe he's sick." "The doctor said he was all right," I would reply. "I think he's hungry." "I just gave him the bottle He dIdn't . " want It. My husband would shift nervously. "\\T ell, do you mind if I try?" "Go right ahead" .. Soon my husband would return, ahashed "He wouldn't eat." "You see?" I would say After ten more mInutes of strain, m, husband would put down his book. "Maybe-if you rocked him?" "That's going to set a precedent" "Well, damn it, we can't just sit here and let him scream " My husband was right; we couldn't. We weren't strong enough. I would go into the bedroom to rock the child. As soon as I picked him up, he would smIle. Within three or four minutes, he would doze off in my arms, an expression of sulky triumph on hIS face. I would put him back.to bed ] ust as I got settled in the living room, I would hear a little sneeze and a bIt of mewling. Then the yelling would begin again. "Doesn't he have some toy? I don't know-bells or somethIng?" my hus- band would say. Wearily, I would go into the bed- room again and fix a dangling jumping jack or a string of beads above the crib. Alex would play with it happily. Ten minutes would go by, and then the wail- Ing would begin again. I t did not stop at our bedtime. In the end, my husband and I took turns keeping .l\.lex quiet while the other one of us slept. A baby usually cries for some good reason, my booklet on infant care said. It is hungry, wet, or dIrty, or a pin may be poking it, or it may have rash. If none of these things happens to be the matter, the booklet concluded, trust to your instin ct. The word "instinct" left me with a feeling of utter helplessness. I had never really felt the moth- er InstInct actively at work inside me. I began to think it had been educated out of me, as our sense of smell-so sci- entists tell us-has been educated away because we don't have to depend on it. I "huddered to imagine what I would have done about bringing up my chil- dren if I had been left to m, own re- .I sources, wIthout my booklet on infant care. Whenever I tried to dredge up a little of that deep, involuntary wis- dom that tells you what to do in a critical situation, I drew a blank. When I could, J handed Alex over to the maId, who paced the floor with him, cursing pleas- antly and chiding him for beIng a bruto. Fortunately, Alex's bad temper did